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The Pronk Pops Show 1286, July 9, 2019, Story 1: Ross Perot: Eagle Scout, Naval Officer, Family Man, Entrepreneur, Businessman, Humanitarian,  Innovator, Outsider, Self-Made Billionaire, Philanthropist, Patriot, Politician, and Texan — An American Legend — Ross Perot Dies At 89 of Leukemia– He Cared — Rest in Peace — Trickle Down Did Not Trickle — We Are In Deeper Do Do — Voodoo Economics — Restore The American Dream — Videos — Story 2: National Debt Rising Rapidly — Deeper and Deeper Do Do — Videos

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Story 1: Ross Perot: Eagle Scout, Naval Officer, Family Man, Entrepreneur, Businessman, Humanitarian,  Innovator, Outsider, Self-Made Billionaire, Philanthropist, Politician, Patriot, Texan — An American Legend — Ross Perot Dies At 89 of Leukemia– He Cared — Rest in Peace — Trickle Down Did Not Trickle — We Are In Deeper Do Do — Voodoo Economics — Restore The American Dream — Videos —

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{youtube=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BjjjclkKzdc]

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Deficits & Debts: Crash Course Economics #9

Ross Perot, self-made billionaire, patriot and philanthropist, dies at 89

Ross Perot, self-made billionaire, renowned patriot and two-time independent candidate for U.S. president, has died after a five-month battle with leukemia.

He was 89.

The pioneer of the computer services industry, who founded Electronic Data Systems Corp. in 1962 and Perot Systems Corp. 26 years later, was just 5-foot-6, but his presence filled a room.

“Describe my father?” Ross Perot Jr., his only son and CEO of the Perot Group, asked rhetorically in an interview. “Obviously a great family man, wonderful father. But at the end of the day, he was a wonderful humanitarian.

“Every day he came to work trying to figure out how he could help somebody.”

Perot was diagnosed with leukemia in February. A massive secondary infection the next month nearly killed him, according to the family.

In true Perot fashion, he fought back, showing up at the office most days in his dark suit with the omnipresent American flag on his lapel.

Perot entertained a steady stream of well-wishers at Perot headquarters on Turtle Creek Boulevard and spent Easter with his family at their compound in Bermuda.

He celebrated his 89th birthday in June with a family lunch at his office and a dinner at the home of his daughter, Carolyn Perot Rathjen.

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Ross Perot at the Dell headquarters in Plano in October 2016.
(Andy Jacobsohn/The Dallas Morning News)

One of his recent visitors was Morton H. Meyerson, the former EDS and Perot Systems president and CEO. Perot named Dallas’ symphony hall after Meyerson when Perot donated $10 million toward its construction in 1984.

“Ross was the unusual combination of his father, who was a powerful, big, burly cotton trader — a hard-ass, practical, cut-deals person — and a mother who was a little-bitty woman who was sweet, warm, wonderful,” Meyerson said. “Ross was tough, smart, practical, loved to negotiate. But he had a warm and kind heart, too.”

In recent years, Perot Sr.’s memory was dimming, but he and Margot, his wife of more than 60 years, maintained a steady social calendar.

Nancy Perot said there was a private, tender side to her father that was often eclipsed by his bolder-than-life public persona.

No matter how busy Perot was, family dinners were sacrosanct when the children were growing up. The only time he wasn’t at the head of the table to say grace was when he was out of town.

“I want people to know about Dad’s twinkle in his eyes,” she said. “He always gave us the biggest hugs. We never doubted that we were the most important things in his life.”

Strong roots

Family influence and an East Texas upbringing molded Perot.

The third child of Lulu May Ray and Gabriel Ross Perot was born in Texarkana in 1930.

He was named Henry Ray, after his maternal grandfather. But Perot changed his middle name in his early teens to honor his beloved father. His older brother, Gabriel Ross Jr., died as a toddler.

When Perot was 25, he dug his father’s grave with a shovel and filled it as a final tribute to him.

A young Ross Perot in his U.S. Naval Academy uniform.&nbsp;(<p><span style="font-size: 1em; background-color: transparent;">Courtesy of Ross Perot</span></p>)
A young Ross Perot in his U.S. Naval Academy uniform.

(Courtesy of Ross Perot)

Perot started throwing the Texarkana Gazette as an 8-year-old. He later credited his newspaper experience with shaping his entrepreneurial ways.

Perot attended Texarkana College before entering the U.S. Naval Academy in 1949.

He met Margot on a blind date when he was a midshipman and she was at Goucher College in Baltimore.

In his autobiography, Ross Perot: My Life & the Principles for Success, Perot reflected on getting several pairs of shoes and a dozen sets of underwear after being sworn into the academy on his 19th birthday.

He had never had more than one pair of shoes and three or four sets of underwear at a time in his life.

“This was possibly my first example of government waste,” he wrote.

Bill Gates of the ’60s

As of July, Forbes estimated Perot’s wealth at $4.1 billion, making him the 478th-richest person in world. That didn’t include the riches he bestowed on his family and community.

Forbes ranked Perot’s self-made quotient as a full-fledged 10. That’s because he started his empire on his 32nd birthday as a one-man operation financed with $1,000 borrowed from Margot.

Perot came up with the name Electronic Data Systems while attending Sunday service at Highland Park Presbyterian Church, where he and Margot have been members since moving to Dallas in 1957. He scribbled it down on the back of a pledge envelope.

Perot became a multimillionaire when he took EDS public in 1968.

In a 2018 interview, Perot Jr. described the family’s dinner the night before the company’s IPO. “Dad said, ‘Now tomorrow, we’re going to take EDS public, and a lot of people are going to write about the money that we have. But remember, none of this is important. The only thing that’s important is our family and how we take care and respect our family.’

“That’s the first time we ever had a money conversation in the family.

“Then we watched Dad become the Bill Gates of the ’60s. As I tell the children, Fortune said he was ‘the fastest, richest Texan ever.’ ”

Fortune added the “H.” to Perot’s name when it put him on its cover after EDS went public. “The media took to it, and it stuck,” said Perot Jr.

Perot became a billionaire in 1984 when General Motors Corp. bought EDS for nearly $2.6 billion.

But the marriage of titans was short-lived, with Perot and GM chairman Roger Smith at loggerheads over such things as GM’s two underfunded employee pension plans while top management’s retirement plan had no such deficit.

GM wanted to make acquisitions. Perot wanted to make better cars.

In 1986, the automaker shelled out $750 million to buy back Perot’s stock. Perot agreed to sever all ties with GM and EDS and end his public haranguing of Smith.

Unfortunately for EDS, GM didn’t get a noncompete agreement.

In 1988, Perot, Perot Jr. and a handful of former EDS loyalists launched Perot Systems in Plano. The information technology services company grew to more than 23,000 employees and had an annual revenue of $2.8 billion when Dell Inc. acquired it in 2009 for $3.9 billion.

Father and son pocketed another $1 billion in that deal.

“Ross had an uncanny ability to think about six moves ahead,” said former EDS executive Tom Meurer, trustee of the Perot Family Trust. “He saw things that most people didn’t. It was a sixth sense.”

Ross Perot

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Ross Perot
Ross Perot in his office Allan Warren (cropped).jpg

Perot in 1986
Born
Henry Ross Perot

June 27, 1930

Died July 9, 2019 (aged 89)

Education Texas High School
Alma mater
Net worth Increase US$4.1 billion (October 2017)
Political party
Spouse(s)
Margot Birmingham (m. 1956)
Children 5, including Ross Perot Jr.

Henry Ross Perot (/pəˈr/; June 27, 1930 – July 9, 2019) was an American business magnate, billionaire, philanthropist, and politician. He was the founder and chief executive officer of Electronic Data Systems and Perot Systems. He ran an independent presidential campaign in 1992 and a third-party campaign in 1996, establishing the Reform Party in the latter election. Both campaigns were among the strongest presidential showings by a third party or independent candidate in U.S. history.

Born in Texarkana, Texas, Perot became a salesman for IBM after serving in the United States Navy. In 1962, he founded Electronic Data Systems, a data processing service company. In 1984, General Motors bought a controlling interest in the company for $2.4 billion. Perot established Perot Systems in 1988 and was an angel investor for NeXT, a computer company founded by Steve Jobs after he left Apple. Perot also became heavily involved in the Vietnam War POW/MIA issue, arguing that hundreds of American servicemen were left behind in Southeast Asia after the Vietnam War. During President George H. W. Bush‘s tenure, Perot became increasingly active in politics and strongly opposed the Gulf War and ratification of the North American Free Trade Agreement.

In 1992, Perot announced his intention to run for president and advocated a balanced budget, an end to the outsourcing of jobs, and the enactment of electronic direct democracy. A June 1992 Gallup poll showed Perot leading a three-way race against President Bush and presumptive Democratic nominee Bill Clinton. Perot briefly withdrew from the race in July, but re-entered the race in early October after he qualified for all 50 state ballots. He chose Admiral James Stockdale as his running mate and appeared in the 1992 debates with Bush and Clinton. In the election, Perot received 18.9% of the popular vote, but did not win any electoral votes. He won support from across the ideological and partisan spectrum, but performed best among self-described moderates. Perot ran for president again in 1996, establishing the Reform Party as a vehicle for his campaign. He won 8.4% of the popular vote against President Clinton and Republican nominee Bob Dole.

Perot did not seek public office again after 1996 and did not enter the 2000 Reform Party presidential primaries. He endorsed Republican George W. Bush over Reform nominee Pat Buchanan in the 2000 election and supported Republican Mitt Romney in 2008 and 2012. In 2009, Dell acquired Perot Systems for $3.9 billion. According to Forbes, Perot was the 167th richest person in the United States in 2016.

Contents

Early life, education, and military career

Perot was born in Texarkana, Texas, the son of Lula May (née Ray) and Gabriel Ross Perot,[1] a commodity broker specializing in cotton contracts. His patrilineal line traces back to an immigrant to French Louisiana in the 1740s.[2][3] He attended a private school called Patty Hill. He graduated from Texas High School in Texarkana in 1947.[4] One of Perot’s childhood friends was Hayes McClerkin, who later became the Speaker of the Arkansas House of Representatives and a prominent lawyer in Texarkana, Arkansas.[5]

While in his teens, Perot changed his middle name from Ray to Ross to honor his father. Perot had an older brother, Gabriel Ross Jr., who died at an early age.[6]

Perot joined the Boy Scouts of America and made Eagle Scout in 1942, after 13 months in the program. He was a recipient of the Distinguished Eagle Scout Award.[7][8]

From 1947 to 1949, he attended Texarkana Junior College, then entered the United States Naval Academy in 1949 and helped establish its honor system.[7][9] Perot said his appointment notice to the academy – sent by telegram – was sent by W. Lee “Pappy” O’Daniel, Texas’s 34th governor and former senator.[10] Perot married Margot Birmingham of GreensburgPennsylvania, in 1956.[11]

Business

L-R: Larry Hagman, Ross Perot, Margot Perot and Suzanne Perot (1988)

After he left the Navy in 1957, Perot became a salesman for IBM. He quickly became a top employee (one year, he fulfilled his annual sales quota in a mere two weeks)[12] and tried to pitch his ideas to supervisors, who largely ignored him.[13] He left IBM in 1962 to found Electronic Data Systems (EDS) in DallasTexas, and courted large corporations for his data processing services. Perot was refused 77 times before he was given his first contract. EDS received lucrative contracts from the U.S. government in the 1960s, computerizing Medicare records. EDS went public in 1968 and the stock price rose from $16 a share to $160 within days. Fortune called Perot the “fastest, richest Texan” in a 1968 cover story.[14] In 1984, General Motors bought controlling interest in EDS for $2.4 billion.[11]

In 1974, Perot gained some press attention for being “the biggest individual loser ever on the New York Stock Exchange” when his EDS shares dropped $450 million in value in a single day in April 1970.[15]

Just prior to the 1979 Iranian Revolution, the government of Iran imprisoned two EDS employees in a contract dispute. Perot organized and sponsored their rescue. The rescue team was led by retired United States Army Special Forces Colonel Arthur D. “Bull” Simons. When the team was unable to find a way to extract the two prisoners, they decided to wait for a mob of pro-Ayatollah revolutionaries to storm the jail and free all 10,000 inmates, many of whom were political prisoners. The two prisoners then connected with the rescue team, and the team spirited them out of Iran via a risky border crossing into Turkey. The exploit was recounted in a book, On Wings of Eagles by Ken Follett, which became a best-seller.[citation needed]

In 1984, Perot’s Perot Foundation bought a very early copy of Magna Carta, one of only a few to leave the United Kingdom. The foundation lent it to the National Archives in Washington, D.C. where it was displayed alongside the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution of the United States. In 2007, the foundation sold it to David Rubenstein, managing director of The Carlyle Group for US$21.3 million to be used “for medical research, for improving public education and for assisting wounded soldiers and their families.”[16] It remains on display at the National Archives.[17]

After Steve Jobs lost the original power struggle at Apple and left to found NeXT, his angel investor was Perot, who invested over $20 million. Perot believed in Jobs and did not want to miss out, as he had with his chance to invest in Bill Gates‘s fledgling Microsoft.[18]

In 1988, he founded Perot Systems Corporation in Plano, Texas. His son, Ross Perot, Jr., eventually succeeded him as CEO. In September 2009, Perot Systems was acquired by Dell for $3.9 billion.[19]

Political activities

Early political activities

After a visit to Laos in 1969, made at the request of the White House,[11] in which he met with senior North Vietnamese officials, Perot became heavily involved in the Vietnam War POW/MIA issue. He believed that hundreds of American servicemen were left behind in Southeast Asia at the end of the U.S. involvement in the war,[20] and that government officials were covering up POW/MIA investigations to avoid revealing a drug-smuggling operation used to finance a secret war in Laos.[21] Perot engaged in unauthorized back-channel discussions with Vietnamese officials in the late 1980s, which led to fractured relations between Perot and the Reagan and George H. W. Bush administrations.[20][21] In 1990, Perot reached agreement with Vietnam’s Foreign Ministry to become its business agent in the event that diplomatic relations were normalized.[22] Perot also launched private investigations of, and attacks upon, United States Department of Defense official Richard Armitage.[20][21]

Perot with a portrait of George Washington in his office in 1986

In Florida in 1990, employing a famous quotation from the 1976 political and mass media satire movie Network, retired financial planner Jack Gargan funded a series of “I’m mad as hell and I’m not going to take it anymore” newspaper advertisements denouncing the United States Congress for voting for legislative pay raises at a time when average wages nationwide were not increasing. Gargan later founded “Throw the Hypocritical Rascals Out” (THRO), which Ross Perot supported.[23]

Perot did not support President George H. W. Bush, and vigorously opposed the United States’ involvement in the 1990–1991 Persian Gulf War. He unsuccessfully urged Senators to vote against the war resolution, and began to consider his own presidential run.[24][25]

1992 presidential campaign

Perot in 1986

On February 20, 1992, Perot appeared on CNN‘s Larry King Live and announced his intention to run as an independent if his supporters could get his name on the ballot in all 50 states. With such declared policies as balancing the federal budget, opposition to gun control, ending the outsourcing of jobs and enacting electronic direct democracy via “electronic town halls,” he became a potential candidate and soon polled roughly even with the two major party candidates.[26]

Perot’s candidacy received increasing media attention when the competitive phase of the primary season ended for the two major parties. With the insurgent candidacies of Republican Pat Buchanan and Democrat Jerry Brown winding down, Perot was the natural beneficiary of populist resentment toward establishment politicians. On May 25, 1992, he was featured on the cover of Time with the title “Waiting for Perot”, an allusion to Samuel Beckett‘s play Waiting for Godot.[27]

Several months before the Democratic and Republican conventions, Perot filled the vacuum of election news, as his supporters began petition drives to get him on the ballot in all 50 states. This sense of momentum was reinforced when Perot employed two savvy campaign managers in Democrat Hamilton Jordan and Republican Ed Rollins. In July, while Perot was pondering whether to run for office, his supporters established a campaign organization United We Stand America. Perot was late in making formal policy proposals, but most of what he did call for were intended to reduce the deficit, such as a fuel tax increase and cutbacks to Social Security.[28]

In June, Perot led a Gallup poll with 39% of the vote.[29] By mid-July, The Washington Post reported that Perot’s campaign managers were becoming increasingly disillusioned by his unwillingness to follow their advice to be more specific on issues,[30] and his need to be in full control of operations[30] with such tactics as forcing volunteers to sign loyalty oaths.[31] Perot’s poll numbers began to slip to 25%, and his advisers warned that if he continued to ignore them, he would fall into single digits. Co-manager Hamilton Jordan threatened to quit, and on July 15, Ed Rollins resigned after Perot fired advertisement specialist Hal Riney, who worked with Rollins on the Reagan campaign. Rollins would later claim that a member of the campaign accused him of being a Bush plant with ties to the Central Intelligence Agency.[32] Amid the chaos, Perot’s support fell to 20%.[33] The next day, Perot announced on Larry King Live that he would not seek the presidency. He explained that he did not want the House of Representatives to decide the election if the result caused the electoral college to be split. Perot eventually stated the reason was that he received threats that digitally altered photographs would be released by the Bush campaign to sabotage his daughter’s wedding.[34]Whatever his reasons for withdrawing, his reputation was badly damaged. Many of his supporters felt betrayed and public opinion polls subsequently showed a large negative view of Perot that was absent prior to his decision to end the campaign.[35]

In September, he qualified for all 50 state ballots. On October 1, he announced his intention to re-enter the presidential race. He campaigned in 16 states and spent an estimated $12.3 million of his own money.[36] Perot employed the innovative strategy of purchasing half-hour blocks of time on major networks for infomercial-type campaign advertisements; this advertising garnered more viewership than many sitcoms, with one Friday night program in October attracting 10.5 million viewers.[37]

At one point in June, Perot led the polls with 39% (versus 31% for Bush and 25% for Clinton). Just prior to the debates, Perot received 7–9% support in nationwide polls.[38] The debates likely played a significant role in his ultimate receipt of 19% of the popular vote. Although his answers during the debates were often general, many Democrats and Republicans conceded that Perot won at least the first debate. In the debate, he remarked:

Keep in mind our Constitution predates the Industrial Revolution. Our founders did not know about electricity, the train, telephones, radio, television, automobiles, airplanes, rockets, nuclear weapons, satellites, or space exploration. There’s a lot they didn’t know about. It would be interesting to see what kind of document they’d draft today. Just keeping it frozen in time won’t hack it.[39]

Perot denounced Congress for its inaction in his speech at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C., on March 18, 1992. Perot said:

This city has become a town filled with sound bitesshell games, handlers, media stuntmen who posture, create images, talk, shoot off Roman candles, but don’t ever accomplish anything. We need deeds, not words, in this city.[40]

In the 1992 election, he received 18.9% of the popular vote, about 19,741,065 votes, but no electoral college votes, making him the most successful third-party presidential candidate in terms of the popular vote since Theodore Roosevelt in the 1912 election.[41] Unlike Perot, however, some other third party candidates since Roosevelt have won electoral college votes. (Robert La Follette had 13 in 1924, Strom Thurmond had 39 in 1948, George Wallace had 46 in 1968 and John Hospers won one in 1972, albeit from a faithless elector. Compared with Thurmond and Wallace, who polled very strongly in a small number of states, Perot’s vote was more evenly spread across the country. Perot managed to finish second in two states: In Maine, Perot received 30.44% of the vote to Bush’s 30.39% (Clinton won Maine with 38.77%); in Utah, Perot received 27.34% of the vote to Clinton’s 24.65% (Bush won Utah with 43.36%). Although Perot did not win a state, he received the most votes in some counties.[citation needed]

A detailed analysis of voting demographics revealed that Perot’s support drew heavily from across the political spectrum, with 20% of his votes coming from self-described liberals, 27% from self-described conservatives, and 53% coming from self-described moderates. Economically, however, the majority of Perot voters (57%) were middle class, earning between $15,000 and $49,000 annually, with the bulk of the remainder drawing from the upper middle class (29% earning more than $50,000 annually).[42][failed verification] Exit polls also showed that Ross Perot drew 38% of his vote from Bush, and 38% of his vote from Clinton.[43] Despite widespread claims that Perot acted as a “spoiler,” there is little reason to think he affected the outcome of the 1992 Presidential election.[44]

Based on his performance in the popular vote in 1992, Perot was entitled to receive federal election funding for 1996. Perot remained in the public eye after the election and championed opposition to the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), urging voters to listen for the “giant sucking sound” of American jobs heading south to Mexico should NAFTA be ratified.[citation needed]

Reform Party and 1996 presidential campaign

Ross Perot 1996 presidential campaign.png

Perot tried to keep his movement alive through the mid-1990s, continuing to speak about the increasing national debt. He was a prominent campaigner against the NAFTA, and even debated with then Vice President Al Gore on the issue on Larry King Live. Perot’s behavior during the debate was a source of mirth thereafter, including his repeated pleas to “let me finish” in his southern drawl. The debate was seen by many as effectively ending Perot’s political career.[45] Support for NAFTA went from 34% to 57%.[46]

In 1995, he founded the Reform Party and won their presidential nomination for the 1996 United States presidential election. His vice presidential running mate was Pat Choate. Because of the ballot access laws, he had to run as an Independent on many state ballots. Perot received 8% of the popular vote in 1996, lower than in the 1992 race, but still an unusually successful third-party showing by U.S. standards. He spent much less of his own money in this race than he had four years before, and also allowed other people to contribute to his campaign, unlike his prior race. One common explanation for the decline was Perot’s exclusion from the presidential debates, based on the preferences of the Democratic and Republican party candidates. Jamie B. Raskin of Open Debates filed a lawsuit about Perot’s exclusion years later.[47][48]

Later activities

Perot attending the 2009 EagleBank Bowl in Washington, D.C.

Later in the 1990s, Perot’s detractors accused him of not allowing the Reform Party to develop into a genuine national political party, but rather using it as a vehicle to promote himself. They cited as evidence the control of party offices by operatives from his presidential campaigns. Perot did not give an endorsement during Jesse Ventura‘s run for governor of Minnesota in the 1998 election, and this became suspicious to detractors when he made fun of Ventura at a conference after Ventura had a falling out with the press. The party leadership grew in tighter opposition to groups supporting Ventura and Jack Gargan. Evidence of this was demonstrated when Gargan was officially removed as Reform Party chairman by the Reform Party National Committee.[citation needed]

In the 2000 presidential election, Perot refused to become openly involved with the internal Reform Party dispute between supporters of Pat Buchanan and John Hagelin. Perot was reportedly unhappy with what he saw as the disintegration of the party, as well as his own portrayal in the press; thus, he chose to remain quiet. He appeared on Larry King Live four days before the election and endorsed George W. Bush for president. Despite his earlier opposition to NAFTA, Perot remained largely silent about expanded use of guest-worker visas in the United States, with Buchanan supporters attributing this silence to his corporate reliance on foreign workers.[49] Some state parties affiliated with the new (Buchananite) America First Party.[citation needed]

Perot speaking in 2006

After that, Perot was largely silent on political issues, refusing to answer most questions from the press. When interviewed, he usually remained on the subject of his business career and refused to answer specific questions on politics, candidates, or his past activities.[citation needed]

One exception to this came in 2005, when he was asked to testify before the Texas Legislature in support of proposals to extend technology to students, including making laptops available to them. He also supported changing the process of buying textbooks by making e-books available and by allowing schools to buy books at the local level instead of going through the state. In an April 2005 interview, Perot expressed concern about the state of progress on issues that he had raised in his presidential runs.[50]

Two further exceptions came with his endorsements in the 2008 and 2012 elections. In January 2008, Perot publicly came out against Republican candidate John McCain and endorsed Mitt Romney for president. He also announced that he would soon be launching a new website with updated economic graphs and charts.[51] In June 2008, this blog launched, focusing on entitlements (Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security), the U.S. national debt, and related issues.[52] In 2012, Perot endorsed Romney for president again.[53] Perot did not give any endorsements for the 2016 election.[citation needed]

Political views

During Perot’s political campaigns, he spoke less on social issues and instead focused on the fiscal issues of the time. Perot did not fit the typical stereotype of a conservative southerner; his views were seen as liberal and usually focused on his economic policy to keep support during his campaigns and gain support from both Democratic and Republican voters from his home state of Texas. Perot was pro-choice, supported gay rights, stricter gun controls such as an assault rifle ban and increased research in AIDS.[54][55][56]

Social issues

From 1992, Perot was a pro-choice activist, and a strong supporter of Planned Parenthood. He stated poorer women in particular should have access to abortions via federal funding. From 2000, he was pro-choice reluctantly.[57]

Economic policy

Perot believed taxes should be increased on the wealthy, while spending should be cut to help pay off the national debt. Perot also believed the capital gains tax should be increased, while giving tax breaks to those starting new businesses.

We cut the capital gains tax rate from a maximum rate of 35% to a maximum rate that got as low as 20% during the 1980s. Who got the benefit? The rich did, of course, because that’s who owns most of the capital assets.

— Not For Sale at Any Price

In his 1993 book Not For Sale at Any Price,[58] Perot expressed support for giving tax cuts for small and medium-sized enterprises, as opposed to larger corporations.[59] Additionally, Perot supported a balanced budget amendment, stating, “spending should not exceed revenue for 27 consecutive years.” On trade, Perot stated that there was a trade deficit between Mexico and the United States and a loss of manufacturing jobs which he believed was caused by NAFTA.[60] His position on Free Trade and NAFTA became his defining campaign principles of both the 1992 and 1996 presidential elections. Perot argued: “We have got to stop sending jobs overseas. It’s pretty simple: If you’re paying $12, $13, $14 an hour for factory workers and you can move your factory south of the border, pay a dollar an hour for labor, … have no health care — that’s the most expensive single element in making a car — have no environmental controls, no pollution controls and no retirement, and you don’t care about anything but making money, there will be a giant sucking sound going south.”

“… when [Mexico’s] jobs come up from a dollar an hour to six dollars an hour, and ours go down to six dollars an hour, and then it’s leveled again. But in the meantime, you’ve wrecked the country with these kinds of deals.

— “THE 1992 CAMPAIGN; Transcript of 2d TV Debate Between Bush, Clinton and Perot”. The New York Times. New York Times Company. 16 October 1992. Retrieved 16 May 2016.

Personal life

Perot and his wife Margot (née Birmingham) had five children (Ross Jr., Nancy, Suzanne, Carolyn, and Katherine).[6] He left 19 grandchildren.[11]

With an estimated net worth of about US$4.1 billion in 2019,[61] he was ranked by Forbes as the 167th-richest person in the United States.[62]

Death

Perot died on July 9, 2019, at the age of 89 in Dallas, Texas, after a battle with leukemia.[61][63]

Honors and achievements

Electoral history

1992 United States presidential election [73]

1996 United States presidential election [74]

  • Bill Clinton/Al Gore (D) (Inc.) – 47,400,125 (49.2%) and 379 electoral votes (31 states and D.C. carried)
  • Bob Dole/Jack Kemp (R) – 39,198,755 (40.7%) and 159 electoral votes (19 states carried)
  • Ross Perot/Pat Choate (Ref.) – 8,085,402 (8.4%) and 0 electoral votes

References …

Further reading

  • Thomas M. Defrank, et al. Quest for the Presidency, 1992. Texas A&M University Press. 1994.
  • Mason, Todd (1990). Perot. Business One Irwin. ISBN 1-55623-236-5 An unauthorized biography by a longtime Perot watcher.
  • Doron P. Levin, Irreconcilable Differences: Ross Perot Versus General Motors (New York: Plume, 1990)
  • Thomas Moore, The GM System is Like a Blanket of FogFortune, February 15, 1988
  • Posner, Gerald Citizen Perot: His Life and Times Random House. New York 1996
  • Clinton, Bill (2005). My Life. Vintage. ISBN 1-4000-3003-X.
  • Forbes 400
  • Rapoport, Ronald and Walter Stone. Three’s a Crowd: The Dynamic of Third Parties, Ross Perot, and Republican Resurgence Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2005.

External links

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ross_Perot

 

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Pelosi: Debt limit vote possible before August recess

Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., speaks during a news conference held by Senate and House Democrats on health care coverage of preexisting conditions on the Senate steps on Tuesday July 9, 2019. Also on Tuesday, she gave some indications about when the House might vote on raising the federal debt limit. (Caroline Brehman/CQ Roll Call)

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., on Tuesday didn’t rule out voting on a debt limit increase before the August recess, though she indicated the need to raise the discretionary spending caps for fiscal 2020 is still an integral part of the discussions.

“Let’s see how the conversations go,” she said. “We certainly do not want any thought of default on the part of the full faith and credit of the United States of America. That’s never been what we’ve been about, but there are those on the Republican side who have embraced that again and again.”

Estimates from the Treasury Department and the Congressional Budget Office have put the deadline for raising the debt limit, required for the U.S. to continue to be able to pay for all government services and benefits, sometime in the latter half of 2019, likely by early October.

Pelosi’s hard line in the debt limit talks has to do with the federal fiscal year deadline of Oct. 1, after which there could be another partial government shutdown if lawmakers and the White House can’t agree on appropriations levels. House Democrats’ view has been that their best leverage to extract higher nondefense spending is to merge the two deadlines so the administration has to play ball on appropriations in order to get the timely debt limit ceiling increase they want.

But the Bipartisan Policy Center, which tracks federal inflows and outlays carefully, said Monday the true “X date” could be moved up to early September given softer projections of corporate tax receipts. That was injecting a greater sense of urgency into the discussions as lawmakers trickled back into town from the July Fourth recess.

“I would hope that we would never think about default. We have not defaulted on our debt, to my understanding, since 1812,” Senate Appropriations Chairman Richard C. Shelby, R-Ala., said Tuesday. “If we have the thought of default or going right up to the brink of default, it sends shock waves through the financial markets of the world. We, the Congress and the administration, owe the American people a lot better than that.”

The discretionary spending talks have been stuck over House Democrats’ insistence on a nondefense number that is over $100 billion more than the White House wants. There’s been no apparent budging on Democrats’ adherence to about $647 billion in nondefense funds, which would be a 7 percent boost over the current year. The comparable White House figure is about 10 percent below fiscal 2019.

House Democrats have passed 10 out of the 12 fiscal 2020 appropriations bills at those levels, plus a $733 billion figure for defense, which is $17 billion shy of what the White House wants.

“The administration knows where we are on that. We’ll just wait to hear back from them,” Pelosi said, adding there were no further meetings planned between senior Capitol Hill and administration officials. Two earlier meetings that included the top congressional leaders of both parties and acting White House Chief of Staff Mick Mulvaney, acting budget chief Russell Vought and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin haven’t borne any fruit.

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“I don’t see any reason to have a meeting,” Pelosi said. “They know where we are. We’ve met, we’ve met, we’ve met. We just anticipate some response from them. If there is a reason to have a meeting, let’s see what they have to say but so far all we need is a response from them.”

At the most recent meeting, White House officials floated a one-year stopgap bill, continuing current funding levels, as well as a one-year suspension of the debt ceiling. But that proposal hasn’t gone anywhere, and GOP defense hawks in Congress have panned the potential impact on the military.

Senate Majority Whip John Thune, R-S.D., said Tuesday that it would be in “everybody’s best interest” for congressional leaders and the Trump administration to reach an agreement on spending levels and the debt limit before Congress leaves for its August recess.

“It would be nice if we could get a caps deal and the House Democrats would start showing a little bit of flexibility and be willing to work with the White House to agree on a number,” Thune said. “We could write a caps deal and attach the debt limit to it and get those issues resolved before August, which I think would be in everybody’s best interest.”

 

Contents
Summary……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….. Page 5
Receipts…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………. Page 10
Outlays…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… Page 11
Means of Financing…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………. Page 25
Receipts/Outlays by Month……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….. Page 35
Federal Trust Funds/ Securities…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………. Page 37
Receipts by Source/Outlays by Function…………………………………………………………………………………………………….. Page 38
Explanatory Notes……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………. Page 39
Introduction
The Monthly Treasury Statement of Receipts and Outlays of the United States Government (MTS) is prepared by the Bureau
of the Fiscal Service, Department of the Treasury and, after approval by the Fiscal Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, is
normally released on the 8th workday of the month following the reporting month. The publication is based on data provided
by Federal entities, disbursing officers, and Federal Reserve banks.
AUDIENCE
The MTS is published to meet the needs of those responsible for or interested in the cash position of the Treasury, those who
are responsible or interested in the Government’s budget results; and individuals and businesses whose operations depend
upon or are related to the Government’s financial operations.
DISCLOSURE STATEMENT
This statement summarizes the financial activities of the Federal Government and off-budget Federal entities conducted in
accordance with the Budget of the U.S. Government, i.e., receipts and outlays of funds, the surplus or deficit, and the means
of financing the deficit or disposing of the surplus. Information is presented on a modified cash basis; receipts are accounted
for on the basis of collections; refunds of receipts are treated as deductions from gross receipts; revolving and management
fund receipts, reimbursements and refunds of monies previously expended are treated as deductions from gross outlays; and
interest on the public debt (public issues) is recognized on the accrual basis. Major information sources include accounting data
reported by Federal entities, disbursing officers, and Federal Reserve banks.
TRIAD OF PUBLICATIONS
The MTS is part of a triad of Treasury financial reports. The Daily Treasury Statement is published each working day of the
Federal Government. It provides data on the cash and debt operations of the Treasury based upon reporting of the Treasury account
balances by Federal Reserve banks. The MTS is a report of Government receipts and outlays, based on agency reporting. The
Combined Statement of Receipts, Outlays, and Balances of the United States Government is the official publication of the detailed
receipts and outlays of the Government. It is published annually in accordance with legislative mandates given to the Secretary of the
Treasury.
DATA SOURCES AND INFORMATION
The Explanatory Notes section of this publication provides information concerning the flow of data into the MTS

Figure 1. Receipts, Outlays, and Surplus/Deficit for April 2019
Figure 2. Cumulative Receipts, Outlays, and Surplus/Deficit through Fiscal Year 2019
Receipts by Source: Outlays by Function:
Surplus
$160 Billion
Source data: Table 9

https://www.fiscal.treasury.gov/files/reports-statements/mts/mts0419.pdf

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